Sherman Antitrust Act
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- The first legislation enacted by the United States
Congress (1890) to curb concentrations of power that interfere with trade
and reduce economic competition. It was named for U.S. senator John Sherman,
who was an expert on the regulation of commerce. One of the act's main
provisions outlaws all combinations that restrain trade between states
or with foreign nations. This prohibition applies not only to formal cartels
but also to any agreement to fix prices, limit industrial output, share
markets, or exclude competition. A second key provision makes illegal all
attempts to monopolize any part of trade or commerce in the United States.
These two provisions, which comprise the heart of the Sherman Act, are
enforceable by the Department of Justice through litigation in the federal
courts. Firms found in violation of the act can be ordered dissolved by
the courts, and injunctions to prohibit illegal practices can be issued.
Violations are punishable by fines and imprisonment. Moreover, private
parties injured by violations are permitted to sue for triple the amount
of damages done them.
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- For more than a decade after its passage, the Sherman
Act was invoked only rarely against industrial monopolies, and then not
successfully, chiefly because of narrow judicial interpretations of what
constitutes trade or commerce among states. Its only effective use was
against trade unions, which were held by the courts to be illegal combinations.
The first vigorous enforcement of the Sherman Act occurred during the administration
of President Theodore Roosevelt (1901-09). In 1914 Congress passed two
legislative measures that provided support for the Sherman Act. One of
these was the Clayton Antitrust Act (q.v.), which elaborated on the general
provisions of the Sherman Act and specified many illegal practices that
either contributed to or resulted from monopolization. The other measure
created the Federal Trade Commission, providing the government with an
agency that had the power to investigate possible violations of antitrust
legislation and issue orders forbidding unfair competition practices.
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- In 1920, however, the Supreme Court applied the so-called
"rule of reason" interpretation of the Sherman Act, which explains
that not every contract or combination restraining trade is unlawful. Only
"unreasonable" restraint of trade through acquisitions, mergers,
and predatory pricing constitute a violation of the Sherman Act. This interpretation
allowed large firms considerably more latitude. But in a case involving
the Aluminum Company of America (1945), the court reversed its stance,
declaring that the size and structure of a corporation were sufficient
grounds for antitrust action. Since that ruling, the prohibition against
monopoly has been periodically enforced, involving in some cases the dismemberment
of the offending firm. One notable example late in the 20th century was
the dismemberment of the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (1984)
under the act's provisions. Enforcement of the Sherman Act also has discouraged
the use of exclusionary tactics to eliminate competition.
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to the President
Benjamin Harrison Page